Literature DB >> 12598207

Scale-up of anaerobic digestion of the biowaste fraction from domestic wastes.

C Gallert1, A Henning, J Winter.   

Abstract

In the City of Karlsruhe/Germany anaerobic digestion of 7200 ta(-1) of separately collected biowaste has proven its feasibility at an organic loading rate (OLR) of up to 8.5 kg CODm(-3)d(-1). An extension of biowaste collection over the whole city area would increase the amount of biowaste to 12,000 ta(-1), leading to an OLR of the existing anaerobic reactor of up to 15 kg CODm(-3)d(-1). To test, whether the increased amount of biowaste could be stabilized in the existing plant, biowaste suspensions were digested in a laboratory reactor at a maximum OLR, that exceeded the future OLR of the full-scale plant. The laboratory reactor was started with effluent of the full-scale biowaste digester. Like in full-scale, biowaste suspension from the hydropulper was added in a fed-batch mode. The elimination of organic material (measured as COD, chemical oxygen demand) and the volumetric gas production were linearly increasing with the OLR from 4.3 to 19 kg CODm(-3)d(-1). Thus, safe operation of the full-scale plant at an OLR of 15 kg CODm(-3)d(-1) should be possible, leaving still some reserve capacity. To determine the metabolic reserves for fatty acid degradation during digestion at an OLR of 10 kg CODm(-3)d(-1), digester effluent was supplemented with either 40 mmoll(-1) acetate, propionate, i-butyrate or n-butyrate. Results of these batch assays indicated a rapid degradation of all fatty acids and fatty acid conversion rates, that would allow a stable anaerobic fermentation at 15 kg CODm(-3)d(-1)OLR. On the basis of the laboratory results the OLR of the full-scale methane reactor was increased to 15 kg CODm(-3)d(-1). After 7 months, results of full-scale digestion were still consistent with the previously obtained laboratory results.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12598207     DOI: 10.1016/S0043-1354(02)00537-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Water Res        ISSN: 0043-1354            Impact factor:   11.236


  2 in total

1.  Food waste collection and recycling for value-added products: potential applications and challenges in Hong Kong.

Authors:  Irene M C Lo; Kok Sin Woon
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2015-03-14       Impact factor: 4.223

2.  Microbial Community Shifts during Biogas Production from Biowaste and/or Propionate.

Authors:  Chaoran Li; Christoph Moertelmaier; Josef Winter; Claudia Gallert
Journal:  Bioengineering (Basel)       Date:  2015-02-09
  2 in total

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